US20240017826A1 - Method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle - Google Patents

Method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US20240017826A1
US20240017826A1 US18/359,717 US202318359717A US2024017826A1 US 20240017826 A1 US20240017826 A1 US 20240017826A1 US 202318359717 A US202318359717 A US 202318359717A US 2024017826 A1 US2024017826 A1 US 2024017826A1
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
uav
mission
parameter
modified
parameters
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Pending
Application number
US18/359,717
Inventor
Michael Winn
Jonathan Millin
Nicholas Pilkington
Jeremy Eastwood
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
DroneDeploy Inc
Original Assignee
DroneDeploy Inc
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by DroneDeploy Inc filed Critical DroneDeploy Inc
Priority to US18/359,717 priority Critical patent/US20240017826A1/en
Assigned to DroneDeploy, Inc. reassignment DroneDeploy, Inc. ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: INFATICS, INC.
Assigned to INFATICS, INC. reassignment INFATICS, INC. ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST (SEE DOCUMENT FOR DETAILS). Assignors: WINN, MICHAEL, MILLIN, JOHNATHAN, EASTWOOD, JEREMY, PILKINGTON, NICHOLAS
Publication of US20240017826A1 publication Critical patent/US20240017826A1/en
Pending legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B64AIRCRAFT; AVIATION; COSMONAUTICS
    • B64UUNMANNED AERIAL VEHICLES [UAV]; EQUIPMENT THEREFOR
    • B64U50/00Propulsion; Power supply
    • B64U50/10Propulsion
    • B64U50/19Propulsion using electrically powered motors
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B64AIRCRAFT; AVIATION; COSMONAUTICS
    • B64CAEROPLANES; HELICOPTERS
    • B64C39/00Aircraft not otherwise provided for
    • B64C39/02Aircraft not otherwise provided for characterised by special use
    • B64C39/024Aircraft not otherwise provided for characterised by special use of the remote controlled vehicle type, i.e. RPV
    • GPHYSICS
    • G05CONTROLLING; REGULATING
    • G05DSYSTEMS FOR CONTROLLING OR REGULATING NON-ELECTRIC VARIABLES
    • G05D1/00Control of position, course or altitude of land, water, air, or space vehicles, e.g. automatic pilot
    • G05D1/0094Control of position, course or altitude of land, water, air, or space vehicles, e.g. automatic pilot involving pointing a payload, e.g. camera, weapon, sensor, towards a fixed or moving target
    • GPHYSICS
    • G05CONTROLLING; REGULATING
    • G05DSYSTEMS FOR CONTROLLING OR REGULATING NON-ELECTRIC VARIABLES
    • G05D1/00Control of position, course or altitude of land, water, air, or space vehicles, e.g. automatic pilot
    • G05D1/02Control of position or course in two dimensions
    • G05D1/0202Control of position or course in two dimensions specially adapted to aircraft
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B64AIRCRAFT; AVIATION; COSMONAUTICS
    • B64UUNMANNED AERIAL VEHICLES [UAV]; EQUIPMENT THEREFOR
    • B64U10/00Type of UAV
    • B64U10/25Fixed-wing aircraft
    • BPERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
    • B64AIRCRAFT; AVIATION; COSMONAUTICS
    • B64UUNMANNED AERIAL VEHICLES [UAV]; EQUIPMENT THEREFOR
    • B64U2101/00UAVs specially adapted for particular uses or applications
    • B64U2101/30UAVs specially adapted for particular uses or applications for imaging, photography or videography

Definitions

  • This invention relates generally to the field of unmanned aerial vehicles and more specifically to a new and useful method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle in the field of unmanned aerial vehicles.
  • FIG. 1 is a chart representation of a method of a preferred embodiment
  • FIG. 2 is a system diagram representation of an unmanned aerial vehicle
  • FIG. 3 is a schematic representation of example mission modification of a method of a preferred embodiment.
  • FIG. 4 is an example representation of a mission parameter adjustment display.
  • a method 100 for controlling an unmanned aerial vehicle includes: receiving a set of a pre-calculated mission parameters corresponding to an initial UAV mission S 110 , collecting UAV operation data during flight of the UAV S 130 , calculating a set of modified mission parameters based on the UAV operation data S 140 , and executing the modified mission on the UAV S 150 .
  • the method 100 may additionally or alternatively include executing the initial UAV mission S 120 , and/or executing a pre-mission test S 125 .
  • the method functions to test operation of a UAV during or just prior to a execution of a mission by the UAV, to check the status of the UAV against a flightpath for the mission, and to adjust the flightpath and/or other mission parameters if necessary to ensure that the UAV can complete the mission satisfactorily.
  • the method can analyze operation data of the UAV to detect a state of charge of a battery within the UAV, to detect a stability of the UAV airframe, and/or to detect a maximum speed and a stall speed of the UAV, etc., and the method can then adjust a cruise speed, a ground area to be covered, the flightpath, etc.
  • the method can similarly model operation of a particular UAV based on UAV flight data collected during a test flight flown by the particular UAV, and the method can then pass the model of the particular UAV to a mission generator such that subsequent missions generated for the particular UAV can accommodate or compensate for a substantially unique configuration, condition, etc. of the particular UAV, which may differ in configuration or condition from other UAVs in a fleet of UAVs.
  • the method can collect battery capacity data, motor efficiency data, fuselage capacity and stability data, etc.
  • a mission generator can then access these calculated values and implement these values as parameters to generate a flight path of the UAV over a ground area of interest such that the flight path inherently accommodates limitations of the UAV.
  • the method can further function to track usage of (e.g., hours on) one or more components of the UAV, to compare usage of these components to component use regulations and/or manufacturer use suggestions, and to prompt an owner or operator of the UAV to preemptively swap out components of the UAV as these components reach the end of their respective useful or regulated lives.
  • usage of e.g., hours on
  • the method can collect motor speed data during each mission flown by a UAV to track a total number of hours of operation of the UAV motor (or a total number of rotations of the motor throughout missions flown by the UAV), compare the total hours of operation on the motor to the manufacturer's suggested total hours on the model of motor before replacement or rebuild, and then transmit a notification (e.g., a message, an email) to an account of an operator associated with the UAV to prompt the operator to replace or rebuild the motor.
  • a notification e.g., a message, an email
  • the method can also automatically detect changes to the UAV, such as replacement of a motor, a propeller (or “prop”), a control surface actuator, a battery, or all or a portion of the fuselage, etc., and the method can automatically update a database of log data specific to the UAV to account for such change.
  • the method can calculate a relationship between air speed of the UAV and current draw of the motor during the test flight, compare this calculated relationship to a similar relationship calculated for the UAV during a previous flight or test flight to determine if a new motor was swapped into the UAV prior to the current test flight, and update a log of specific to the UAV to reflect this change in motors.
  • the method can reset a time counter for a motor within the UAV to “0” to reflect detected installation of a new motor into the UAV.
  • the method can therefore collect data from a UAV and manipulate these data to modify pre-calculated flight paths and to log use of various (critical) components of the UAV.
  • the method can therefore execute remotely from the UAV, such as on a remote computer system that generates missions for one or more UAVs (e.g., a fleet of UAVs) according to selected ground areas of interest and/or that controls UAVs remotely during execution of missions.
  • the computer system can be a cloud-based computer (e.g., Amazon EC2), a mainframe computer system, a grid-computer system, or any other suitable computer system.
  • the computer system can be a remote server that communicates with one or more UAVs over HTTP (or TCP or UDP) protocols through a web service (e.g., Amazon AWS).
  • the computer system can thus transmit data (e.g., mission commands, flight paths, UAV location, UAV operation data) to and from a UAV over a cellular, Wi-Fi, satellite, or other suitable wireless network.
  • the method can be implemented on a local computing device.
  • a local flight control station specific to one or more UAVs and including a wireless radio can implement the method to communicate with the UAV(s) directly over a cellular communication protocol before, during, and/or upon completion of the mission.
  • the method can be implemented by a computing device arranged in the UAV within the fleet.
  • a UAV can incorporate a processor that interfaces with an autopilot module and a wireless transceiver within the UAV to collect UAV operation data (e.g., GPS data, telemetry data, sensor status data, network connectivity data, etc.), to manipulate the UAV operation data, to log the operation data, to transmit prompts to an operator, and/or to modify a flightpath according to detected limitations of the UAV.
  • UAV operation data e.g., GPS data, telemetry data, sensor status data, network connectivity data, etc.
  • the method can be implemented by any one or more of a remote computer system, a local flight control station, or one local computing device arranged in a UAV.
  • the method can be implemented by the remote computer system but, when long-range wireless (e.g., cellular) communication with the fleet is lost, a local computing device within a UAV can assume a master control position and implement remaining elements of the method until long-range wireless communication is regained.
  • long-range wireless e.g., cellular
  • the method can be implemented in any other suitable way.
  • the method can therefore execute in conjunction with a UAV that includes: flight control surfaces; actuators configured to manipulate the flight control surfaces; a motor; a prop; an autopilot module configured to control the actuators and the propulsion assembly according to a scheduled flightpath; a co-pilot module providing an interface between a remote computer network and the autopilot module, actuators within the UAV, and sensors within the UAV; and a fuselage supporting the flight control surfaces, the actuators, the autopilot module, the propulsion assembly, and the co-pilot module, as shown in FIG. 2 .
  • the UAV can also include various sensors, such as a three-dimensional optical sensor, (e.g., a LIDAY system, a stereoscopic camera), a two-dimensional sensor (e.g., a CMOS digital camera, a thermal imaging sensor), and/or a single-dimensional sensor (e.g., a chemical sensor, a temperature sensor, a barometric sensor), etc., that capture data during missions executed by the UAV, and the co-pilot module can interface with a wireless communication module within the UAV to upload data from these sensors (and actuator data) to a remote database executing all or a portion of the method.
  • the UAV can therefore include a fixed-wing aircraft.
  • the UAV can include a vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) aircraft.
  • the UAV can also be a component of an unmanned aerial system (UAS) that includes sensors, ground control software (GCS), infrastructure (e.g., radios, a mission control station), support crews, maintenance crews, etc.
  • UGS un
  • S 110 includes receiving a set of a pre-calculated mission parameters corresponding to an initial UAV mission.
  • the set of pre-calculated mission parameters preferably include a UAV flightpath (specified by global coordinates or any other coordinate system, including local coordinate systems), but may additionally or alternatively include any parameters corresponding to a UAV mission (e.g., altitude, air speed, ground speed, flight time, flight control surface positions, camera shutter events, actuator settings, etc.).
  • the set of pre-calculated mission parameters may include a set of waypoints for the UAV to fly along, along with a set of parameters specifying when a UAV camera should take aerial photographs along the route.
  • S 110 preferably includes receiving pre-calculated mission parameters at the UAV from a remote server over a wireless internet connection (e.g., a cellular connection), but may additionally or alternatively include receiving pre-calculated mission parameters in any suitable manner (e.g., via a flash drive plugged into the UAV).
  • a wireless internet connection e.g., a cellular connection
  • pre-calculated mission parameters in any suitable manner (e.g., via a flash drive plugged into the UAV).
  • S 120 includes initiating execution of the initial UAV mission.
  • S 120 functions to begin UAV flight (and/or other operations) according to the pre-calculated mission parameters.
  • the method 100 may include S 120 for a number of reasons; e.g., if the UAV is expected to be able to complete the initial mission. If data collected during the initial UAV mission indicates a less-than-satisfactory mission outcome (as collected and analyzed in S 130 ), the mission may be modified (S 140 and S 150 ).
  • the pre-mission test is a standardized test defining a test flightpath suitable to test various components of the UAV, such as a motor, a battery, a prop, a fuselage, and/or control surfaces of the UAV, and the co-pilot within the UAV can interface with various sensors and actuators within the UAV to collect data for these components as the UAV executes the test flightpath.
  • the pre-mission test can define: a first portion of the test flightpath specifying level flight at an altitude of loom at full power from which a maximum air speed of the UAV is determined; a second portion of the test flightpath specifying a near-vertical climb from loom altitude from which a maximum thrust of the UAV is determined; a third portion of the test flightpath specifying a decrease in air speed until stall is achieved from which a stall speed of the UAV is determined; a fourth portion of the test flightpath specifying a cycling ramping the motor from a no-power to a full-power setting from which a motor torque curve, a maximum motor torque, a motor efficiency curve, a propeller efficiency, a battery state of charge, and/or a maximum battery supply current, etc.
  • the total standardized pre-mission test sequence can be completed within a period of sixty seconds prior to execution of a mission thirty-minutes in duration.
  • the standardized pre-mission test sequence can define any other flightpaths or operations from which various UAV parameters or functions can be calculated.
  • Pre-mission tests may test any UAV components, including any sensors coupled to the UAV (e.g., cameras, chemical sensors, photodetectors, microphones, RADAR/SONAR sensors, etc.)
  • sensors coupled to the UAV e.g., cameras, chemical sensors, photodetectors, microphones, RADAR/SONAR sensors, etc.
  • pre-mission tests may include flightpaths or other operations directed to measuring characteristics of the flight environment (e.g., air temperature, wind speed, obstacles present in a particular area, etc.).
  • S 125 may include performing an “on-boarding” flight test when a (new) UAV is added to a UAV fleet or during a “reset” flight test following a rebuild.
  • the UAV can takeoff, execute the pre-mission test sequence, offload any of the foregoing data to the remote UAV management network, and then land again without executing another mission,
  • S 130 can characterize the UAV from these data, and the remote UAV management network can implement this characterization of the UAV when generating flight paths and flight parameters of the UAV in subsequent missions designating the UAV and elected by an operator.
  • the method 100 may include either or both of S 120 and S 125 .
  • the method may include performing a pre-mission test (S 125 ), passing the pre-mission test, and then initiating execution of the initial mission without modification (S 120 ).
  • S 130 includes collecting UAV operation data during flight of the UAV.
  • S 130 functions to collect UAV operation data (e.g., UAV component data, UAV sensor data, environmental data, etc.) for purposes of modifying the initial UAV mission.
  • UAV operation data e.g., UAV component data, UAV sensor data, environmental data, etc.
  • UAV operation data preferably includes any data relevant to UAV operation; e.g., air speed, heading, ground speed, position, orientation, camera data, air temperature data, actuator status, sensor data, payload data, UAV communication data, UAV flightpath, and humidity.
  • UAV communication data may include mission parameters transmitted/received by other UAVs. For example, a first UAV may update a flightpath for aerial photography and then transmit that updated flightpath to other UAVs. If the new flightpath intersects with any other UAV's flightpath, the intersecting UAV may alter its flightpath to avoid covering the same area redundantly (unless overlapping coverage is desired).
  • S 130 may be performed at any time, including during a pre-mission test and/or in real-time during a mission.
  • S 130 preferably includes collecting UAV operation data at the UAV, but may additionally or alternatively include transmitting UAV operation data to be collected by a remote computer.
  • the UAV co-pilot (or other processor, memory module, etc.) within the UAV can sample the autopilot, various sensors, and various actuators within the UAV, such as according to an internal or external clock and a preset sampling rate (e.g., 20 Hz) and then upload these data substantially in real-time to a remote computer network over wireless communication.
  • a remote UAV management network can receive data downloaded from the co-pilot over cellular communication protocol as these data are collected at the UAV. Alternatively, collected data could be retrieved in bulk upon completion (or abortion) of a mission or pre-mission test sequence.
  • S 130 may include processing raw data received at the UAV (or remote computer). For example, S 130 may include calculating a motor efficiency based on motor rotational speed and airspeed.
  • S 130 includes receiving an output voltage (and/or an output current) of a main battery within the UAV at various throttle settings of the motor, such as at 0%, 25%, 50%, 75%, and 100% throttle settings, and then transforming these voltage readings into battery state of charge based on a known discharge curve of the battery.
  • S 130 can alternatively include integrating a current output of the battery over time, implementing Kalman filtering, or monitoring an internal pressure of the battery to calculate a state of charge of the battery.
  • S 130 can then calculate a range of the UAV based on the state of charge of the UAV, and also accommodate for wind conditions over a ground area over which the UAV will fly during the mission to calculate total ground distance that the UAV can traverse in its current state.
  • S 130 can record collect steady state temperatures within the fuselage for various throttle settings of the motor, and calculate a maximum allowable throttle setting or a maximum allowable current draw for the current mission based on a maximum allowable battery and/or fuselage temperature for the UAV.
  • S 130 can collect steady state temperatures of the motor at various throttle settings, and identify a maximum air speed of the UAV based on a maximum allowable temperature of the motor.
  • S 130 can collect acceleration and rotation data from an accelerometer and a gyroscope arranged within the UAV during various maneuvers executed by the UAV during the pre-mission test sequence, and characterize pitch, yaw, and roll responses of the UAV to manipulation of the control surfaces to detect a stability of the UAV flight.
  • S 130 can determine that the UAV is unstable and therefore unfit for flight if the UAV exhibits extreme changes pitch, yaw, and/or roll in response to a small change in the position of a control surface, if the UAV exhibits no change in pitch, yaw, and/or roll in response to a large change in the position of a control surface, or if constant manipulation of the control surfaces is required for the UAV to fly in a straight line.
  • S 130 can also determine a tightest turning radius (at one or more cruise speeds), climb rate, and/or descent rate of the UAV from these rotation and acceleration data.
  • S 130 can collect and/or receive UAV operation data in any other way and extract any one or more UAV characteristics from these data.
  • S 130 is executed by a computer network that receives data from the UAV in raw, unprocessed form or in compressed form; the network can then process these data to determine if the UAV is capable of competing a current mission (within a reasonable degree of certainty).
  • the UAV can execute all or a portion of S 130 locally and then upload results (e.g., a calculated motor torque curve, maximum motor torque, motor efficiency curve, propeller efficiency, battery state of charge, maximum battery supply current, etc.) to the computer network.
  • S 140 includes calculating a set of modified mission parameters based on the UAV operation data.
  • S 140 is preferably executed in response to a determination or estimation that the UAV is unable to complete the initial mission, based on data collected during the pre-mission test and/or execution of the initial mission. Additionally or alternatively, S 140 may be performed at any time in response to any stimulus; for example, a set of modified mission parameters may be calculated in response to a user request for mission modification.
  • S 140 may include comparing UAV characteristics (as collected and processed in S 130 ) to characteristics required for performance of the set of pre-calculated mission parameters to determine if the UAV is capable of completing the mission as currently defined and/or what modification to the mission may be necessary to increase odds of success.
  • UAV component data is manipulated to generate a curve defining predicted total ground distance that can be covered by the UAV relative to ground speed of the UAV, based on a state of charge of the battery within the UAV, a curve defining a relationship between air speed and battery output power (and bounded by the maximum air speed and stall speed of the UAV), and a current (or forecast) weather condition (e.g., wind speed and direction) at the location specified in the mission (e.g., as collected from a remote weather database).
  • a current (or forecast) weather condition e.g., wind speed and direction
  • a total ground distance that must be covered by the UAV to complete the mission as currently defined can be calculated and compared to a maximum total ground distance that can be traversed by the UAV in its current state to determine if the UAV can complete the mission.
  • local weather (e.g., wind) data can be applied to this comparison, such as by accessing local wind data from a remote weather database.
  • an air speed specified in the mission parameters can be adjusted to increase an efficiency of the UAV during the mission, such as by setting a target air speed of the UAV at an air speed corresponding to a best compromise of maximum motor efficiency and maximum battery efficiency, and updating parameters of the mission to reflect this new target air speed for the UAV during execution of the mission.
  • S 140 can calculate a maximum air speed of the UAV at which the UAV can still complete the mission in order to reduce total flight time of the UAV (and therefore total operator cost) for completion of the mission, update parameters of the mission to reflect this new target air speed for the UAV.
  • S 140 can include altering the mission to accommodate this deficiency of the UAV. For example, S 140 can change a primary direction of flight of the UAV during the mission to reduce a duration of the mission over which the UAV flies directly into the wind, thereby extending a ground distance that can be traversed by the UAV during execution of the updated mission.
  • S 140 can reduce a size of the ground area of interest such that a total ground distance that the UAV must cover to achieve a target lateral step-over distance and a target longitudinal step-over distance between images captured by the UAV without exceeding the estimated total ground range of the UAV, such as shown in FIG. 3 .
  • S 140 can increase an altitude at which the UAV is to capture images of a specified ground area to reduce a number of cut-back sections of the flight path of the mission to reduce a total ground distance that must be covered by the UAV to fully image the area of interest.
  • S 140 can determine that a target cruise speed of the UAV is to low or too high for the UAV to complete the mission as currently specified, and S 140 can thus set a new target cruise speed for the mission such that the UAV can operate at an improved efficiency sufficient to complete other parameters of the mission.
  • S 140 includes splitting the mission into segments. Mission segments may then be executed serially or in parallel by one or more UAVs.
  • S 140 can therefore handle data from multiple UAVs to generate and/or manipulate corresponding missions parameters. However, S 140 can alter any other parameter of the mission.
  • a UAV executes a mission to take aerial photographs of a particular area.
  • the photographs collected by the UAV are analyzed in S 130 (by the UAV and/or by a remote computer); any images deemed unsatisfactory (e.g., a particular area covered in shadow, a blurry photograph) may result in the flight plan of the UAV being modified to recapture the areas of issue.
  • a UAV executes a mission following an oil pipeline while taking samples with a hydrocarbon sensor. If the UAV detects anomalies in sensed hydrocarbon data collected in S 130 (e.g., an unexpectedly high level of a particular hydrocarbon), the mission may be altered by S 140 to provide further information on areas containing the anomalies (e.g., the flightplan may be altered to a spiral pattern mapping a circle centered on the anomaly).
  • the UAV detects anomalies in sensed hydrocarbon data collected in S 130 (e.g., an unexpectedly high level of a particular hydrocarbon)
  • the mission may be altered by S 140 to provide further information on areas containing the anomalies (e.g., the flightplan may be altered to a spiral pattern mapping a circle centered on the anomaly).
  • S 140 may include prompting an operator to select a type of change to be made to the mission and/or to confirm a proposed change to the mission.
  • S 140 can present prompts to the operator—such as through an operator interface accessed through a web browser—to select one of longer mission time (e.g., due to reduced UAV cruise speed), reduced image resolution (e.g., due to increased altitude during imaging passes or increased step-over distance between imaging passes), or reduced size of ground area of interest (e.g., from removal of a portion of the original ground area of interest from the modified mission).
  • longer mission time e.g., due to reduced UAV cruise speed
  • reduced image resolution e.g., due to increased altitude during imaging passes or increased step-over distance between imaging passes
  • reduced size of ground area of interest e.g., from removal of a portion of the original ground area of interest from the modified mission.
  • S 140 can prompt the user to set a position of a slider bar along a continuous slider defining a “greatest distance” position at one extreme and a “longest mission time” at an opposite extreme, and S 140 can adjust parameters of the mission according to a compromise elected by the user through manipulation of the slider bar, as shown in FIG. 4 .
  • S 140 can prompt the operator to confirm the modification, to cancel to mission, or to select a different UAV to perform the mission.
  • S 140 can also account for a margin of safety for calculating a range of the UAV and modifying mission parameters according to substantially ensure that the UAV will successfully land in a designated area.
  • S 140 can then upload an updated mission (or discrete modified parameters of the mission) to the UAV followed by a trigger to begin execution of the updated mission.
  • S 140 can determine that the UAV cannot complete the mission as currently defined or receive confirmation from an operator to abort the mission, and thus order grounding of the UAV (performed by S 150 ). For example, S 150 can transmit a prompt to the UAV to immediately execute a landing sequence defined at an end of the mission currently loaded onto the UAV.
  • S 150 includes initiating execution of the modified mission on the UAV.
  • S 150 preferably includes implementing modifications to the initial mission indicated by the modified mission parameters calculated in S 140 .
  • S 150 preferably includes executing modified mission parameters in real-time (e.g., if mission parameters are updated mid-mission) but may additionally or alternatively execute modified mission parameters at any time. For example, if modified mission parameters are calculated based on data collected during a pre-flight test, the modified mission parameters may be implemented whenever the modified mission is scheduled to begin (e.g., immediately after the pre-flight test, after a re-charge following the pre-flight test, or at any other time).
  • the method 100 may additionally include logging operation data of the UAV collected during execution of the prescribed mission by the UAV, and/or prompting an operator associated with the UAV to exchange a component within the UAV based on the operation data and a projected life of the component if necessary.
  • logging operation data functions to collect data pertaining to use of the UAV and its subsystems over the course of various missions and to aggregate this data into logs through which discrete components or subsystems of the UAV can be monitored.
  • component and subsystem logs can be compared to regulated or recommended component and subsystem lifespans and deliver prompts for preemptively exchanging components and subsystems of the UAV before predicted or projected failure.
  • a variety of data can be collected from the UAV during across various missions, such as a number of hours that the UAV is in flight, battery charge/discharge cycles, takeoffs and landings, ground or air distance travel, motor rotations, peak or average fuselage temperature, sun exposure, moisture (e.g., rain) exposure, peak or average battery temperature, peak battery output current and voltage, peak or average motor temperature, pitch, yaw, and roll response, maximum altitude, peak or average speed, etc. and then augment discrete logs for each critical component and subsystem within the UAV with these monitored data.
  • This data may be collected as UAV operation data in S 130 or may be collected independently/for other purposes.
  • Data may be collected in real-time as the UAV executes a mission or at any other time; data collected can include raw sensor and actuator data from the UAV, or the UAV can compress any of these data and then transmit compressed flight data to the remote UAV management network.
  • discrete logs are maintained for each of a battery, a motor, a prop, a fuselage, control surface actuators, and/or any other high-wear or critical component or subsystem within a particular UAV, and these logs are stored on the remote UAV management network, in a remote database, and/or locally on the UAV, such as in memory within the co-pilot module.
  • the UAV can distribute mission hours, charge/discharge cycle data, peak or average battery temperature, peak battery output current and voltage, and peak or average fuselage temperature to a battery-specific log; distribute mission hours, motor rotations, peak battery output current and voltage, and peak or average motor and fuselage temperature to a motor-specific log; and distribute mission hours, pitch, yaw, and roll response, maximum altitude, peak or average speed, sun exposure, moisture exposure, takeoff and landing data, and peak or average fuselage temperature to a fuselage-specific log.
  • Logs can be stored for components and/or subsystems of a UAV under a substantially unique identifier for the UAV or high-priority component within the UAV.
  • component and subsystems logs can be stored under an identifier pointing to the co-pilot module within the UAV, such as to a unique serial number or wireless communication address of the co-pilot.
  • component and subsystems logs can be stored under an identifier pointing to a serial number of the fuselage or to a serial number or GPS address of the autopilot module within the UAV.
  • UAV data can thus be stored under a unique identifier for that UAV to distinguish data from other UAVs (e.g., in a fleet of UAVs).
  • the UAV can maintain a database of component and subsystem regulated and/or manufacture-suggested part lives, compare a log for each critical component or subsystem within the UAV to these regulated and/or manufacture-suggested part lives, and deliver prompts to exchange components or subsystems within the UAV to an operator accordingly.
  • a manufacturer of a motor currently installed in the UAV can suggest a maximum useful life of 100 hours for the motor, the UAV can count each minute that the UAV in flight with the current motor, and transmit a prompt to exchange the motor to an account of an operator of the UAV when the number of hours on the motor reaches 95 hours, 98 hours, and 99 hours.
  • the prompt can be accessed by the operator through a notification within a native UAV management application executing on a mobile computing device (e.g., a smartphone, a tablet), or through a web browser executing on a computing device (e.g., a desktop computer, a laptop computer, a tablet).
  • a mobile computing device e.g., a smartphone, a tablet
  • a web browser executing on a computing device
  • a government (e.g., federal) regulation can stipulate a maximum time of 200 hours, a maximum of two crashes, a maximum of 100 takeoffs, and a maximum heat exposure within a fuselage of 16,000° F.-hours (i.e., an integral of fuselage temperature over time in the air) for a UAV fuselage of the type (e.g., size) of the UAV, and the UAV can track each of these parameters in a fuselage-specific log for the UAV.
  • the UAV can identify an upcoming breach of any of these regulated parameters by the UAV (or breach of the regulation in the event of a third crash) and deliver a corresponding notification to the operator to replace the fuselage of the UAV with a new fuselage (i.e., to move other actuators, sensors, and controllers from the old fuselage to the new fuselage).
  • Such prompts can be delivered to the operator at the beginning of a mission involving the UAV, during the mission with the UAV when a component within UAV approaches or surpasses one or more regulated or suggested lifespan, upon completion of the mission, and/or when the operator and/or the UAV are near a repair shop or service center.
  • the UAV or UAV platform can also point the operator to stored log data of the UAV and/or to UAV data specific to component of the UAV referenced in the prompt.
  • an application can retrieve and open log data of the UAV in response to selection of the prompt. Operator access to UAV log data can therefore be handled through prompts (e.g., notifications).
  • the UAV (and/or platform) can similarly cooperate to detect components of the UAV that have already failed and to deliver corresponding prompts to the operator to replace the failed component(s) accordingly.
  • the method 100 can function in any other way to log use of one or more components and/or subsystems of the UAV over a series of missions and to deliver any other suitable UAV maintenance prompt to an associated operator or operator account.
  • the method 100 may additionally or alternatively include detecting a recent modification to a component installed in the UAV based on the operation data and an operation history of the UAV, and/or updating a flight record of the UAV according to the detected modification.
  • detecting a recent modification functions to characterize operation of one or more current components or subsystems of the UAV and to compare these characterizations to previous characterizations of components and/or subsystems within the UAV to detect a possible recent exchange of a component or subsystem of the UAV.
  • the detection process can extract a characteristic of a battery, a motor, a prop, a control surface actuator, and/or a fuselage of the UAV, etc.
  • Updates to the flight record can then function to automatically update a component or subsystem log to reflect a new component or subsystem installed into UAV, such as by resetting a log of a corresponding component or subsystem for total hours, heat exposure, takeoffs, and/or crashes, etc.
  • the method 100 characterizes UAV components from UAV data collected during pre-mission test sequences executed by the UAV before each mission such that characterizations may be generated from UAV data generated under substantially similar conditions (i.e., test flight paths) across various missions on various different dates.
  • UAV data can be characterized wherein the data is collected from an end (e.g., a final two minutes) of a previous flight, from a beginning (e.g., a first two minutes) of a current flight, and these characterizations are compared to automatically detect a change to a component or subsystem installed in the UAV.
  • the method 100 models a change in UAV air speed relative to a change in motor speed from current UAV data and detects that the prop of the UAV was replaced with a different (e.g., new) prop if the new model for UAV air speed relative to motor speed differs from a model for UAV air speed relative to motor speed calculated during a previous mission by more than a threshold amount.
  • the method 100 can interface with an air speed sensor, or can calculate an air speed of the UAV based on a local wind speed and direction (retrieved from a weather database), GPS coordinates of the UAV, and a UAV trajectory.
  • the method 100 models a current draw of the motor relative to UAV air speed and detects that the motor of the UAV was replaced with a different (e.g., new) motor if the new model for motor current draw relative to UAV air speed differs from a similar model calculated during a previous mission by more than a threshold amount.
  • the method 100 can also compensate for a prop change in this model.
  • the method 100 can also compare the new motor current draw v. UAV air speed model to similar models of motor types currently available and suitable for the fuselage to predict what motor type was installed into the fuselage.
  • the method 100 models a sensitivity of the pitch, yaw, and roll of the UAV to changes in flight surfaces and compare this model to a similar model generated during a previous mission to determine if the fuselage of the UAV was repaired or replaced.
  • the method 100 can also manipulate this current model in comparison to the previous model to detect changes to a payload carried by the UAV, to detect structure added to or removed from the fuselage, to detect a change in (or a new position of) a center of gravity of the UAV, or to detect a change in the weight of the UAV.
  • the method 100 models an output voltage of a battery within the UAV relative to throttle setting and compares this new model to a similar previous model to detect replacement of a battery previously installed in the UAV with a new battery.
  • the method 100 can also prompt an operator to confirm a detected change of a battery, motor, fuselage, or prop, etc. in the UAV, to enter whether the component is new, used, or refurnished, and/or to enter a make and model of the replaced component, etc.
  • the UAV can then update a log corresponding to an exchanged component accordingly.
  • the method can implement similar methods and techniques to process UAV data in real-time and to make adjustment to UAV parameters substantially in real-time during execution of the current mission.
  • the method can monitor a state of charge of a battery within the UAV during a flight and then return the UAV to a launch site (or rally point, landing area, takeoff area, etc.) if the battery level approaches or reaches a threshold minimum state required to reliably return the UAV to an operator.
  • the method can monitor local weather conditions—such as through sensors within the UAV or data retrieved from a remote weather database—and react to changing weather conditions by changing flight parameters of the UAV (e.g., speed, direction, attitude, subregion of a ground area of interest to fly over, etc.).
  • the method can detect changes to the UAV and/or failures of component of the UAV while in flight and then automatically execute a corrective action (e.g., to execute a glide landing routine to land the UAV in a designated landing area in response to a detected motor failure) and/or deliver a prompt to an operator to take a corrective action accordingly.
  • the method can therefore implement a ‘continuous test sequence’ (similar to the pre-mission test sequence) to collect and handle UAV data during execution of a mission.
  • the method can implement any other method or technique to collect and handle data from one or more UAVs.
  • the UAV and methods of the invention can be embodied and/or implemented at least in part as a machine configured to receive a computer-readable medium storing computer-readable instructions.
  • the instructions can be executed by computer-executable components integrated with the vehicle, scheduling kiosk(s), a remote scheduling server, hardware/firmware/software elements of a user computer or mobile device, or any suitable combination thereof.
  • Other systems and methods of the invention can be embodied and/or implemented at least in part as a machine configured to receive a computer-readable medium storing computer-readable instructions.
  • the instructions can be executed by computer-executable components integrated by computer-executable components integrated with apparatuses and networks of the type described above.
  • the computer-readable medium can be stored on any suitable computer readable media such as RAMs, ROMs, flash memory, EEPROMs, optical devices (CD or DVD), hard drives, floppy drives, or any suitable device.
  • the computer-executable component can be a processor but any suitable dedicated hardware device can (alternatively or additionally) execute the instructions.

Abstract

A method for adaptive mission execution by an unmanned aerial vehicle includes receiving a set of pre-calculated mission parameters corresponding to an initial UAV mission; collecting UAV operation data during flight of the unmanned aerial vehicle; calculating a set of modified mission parameters from the set of pre-calculated mission parameters and the UAV operation data, the set of modified mission parameters corresponding to a modified UAV mission; and executing the modified UAV mission on the unmanned aerial vehicle.

Description

    CROSS-REFERENCE TO RELATED APPLICATIONS
  • This application is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 16/230,363, filed 21 Dec. 2018, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 15/601,867, filed 22 May 2017, which is a continuation of U.S. patent application Ser. No. 14/717,955, filed 20 May 2015, which claims the benefit of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/000,933, filed on 20 May 2014, and of U.S. Provisional Application No. 62/045,473, filed on 3 Sep. 2014, all of which are incorporated in their entireties by this reference.
  • TECHNICAL FIELD
  • This invention relates generally to the field of unmanned aerial vehicles and more specifically to a new and useful method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle in the field of unmanned aerial vehicles.
  • BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
  • FIG. 1 is a chart representation of a method of a preferred embodiment;
  • FIG. 2 is a system diagram representation of an unmanned aerial vehicle;
  • FIG. 3 is a schematic representation of example mission modification of a method of a preferred embodiment; and
  • FIG. 4 is an example representation of a mission parameter adjustment display.
  • DESCRIPTION OF THE PREFERRED EMBODIMENTS
  • The following description of the preferred embodiments of the invention is not intended to limit the invention to these preferred embodiments, but rather to enable any person skilled in the art to make and use this invention.
  • As shown in FIG. 1 , a method 100 for controlling an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) includes: receiving a set of a pre-calculated mission parameters corresponding to an initial UAV mission S110, collecting UAV operation data during flight of the UAV S130, calculating a set of modified mission parameters based on the UAV operation data S140, and executing the modified mission on the UAV S150. The method 100 may additionally or alternatively include executing the initial UAV mission S120, and/or executing a pre-mission test S125.
  • Generally, the method functions to test operation of a UAV during or just prior to a execution of a mission by the UAV, to check the status of the UAV against a flightpath for the mission, and to adjust the flightpath and/or other mission parameters if necessary to ensure that the UAV can complete the mission satisfactorily. For example, the method can analyze operation data of the UAV to detect a state of charge of a battery within the UAV, to detect a stability of the UAV airframe, and/or to detect a maximum speed and a stall speed of the UAV, etc., and the method can then adjust a cruise speed, a ground area to be covered, the flightpath, etc. for the mission to substantially ensure that the UAV—in its current measured state—can complete the mission (e.g., a surveillance mission, a logistics or delivery mission, or a mapping mission). The method can similarly model operation of a particular UAV based on UAV flight data collected during a test flight flown by the particular UAV, and the method can then pass the model of the particular UAV to a mission generator such that subsequent missions generated for the particular UAV can accommodate or compensate for a substantially unique configuration, condition, etc. of the particular UAV, which may differ in configuration or condition from other UAVs in a fleet of UAVs. For example, the method can collect battery capacity data, motor efficiency data, fuselage capacity and stability data, etc. of the UAV as the UAV flies a standardized test flight and then calculate a preferred cruise speed based on motor efficiency, a minimum air flight speed, a maximum air speed, and/or a relationship between total (air or ground) range relative to air speed, etc. of the UAV. In this example, at a later date following the standardized test flight, a mission generator can then access these calculated values and implement these values as parameters to generate a flight path of the UAV over a ground area of interest such that the flight path inherently accommodates limitations of the UAV.
  • The method can further function to track usage of (e.g., hours on) one or more components of the UAV, to compare usage of these components to component use regulations and/or manufacturer use suggestions, and to prompt an owner or operator of the UAV to preemptively swap out components of the UAV as these components reach the end of their respective useful or regulated lives. For example, the method can collect motor speed data during each mission flown by a UAV to track a total number of hours of operation of the UAV motor (or a total number of rotations of the motor throughout missions flown by the UAV), compare the total hours of operation on the motor to the manufacturer's suggested total hours on the model of motor before replacement or rebuild, and then transmit a notification (e.g., a message, an email) to an account of an operator associated with the UAV to prompt the operator to replace or rebuild the motor. The method can also automatically detect changes to the UAV, such as replacement of a motor, a propeller (or “prop”), a control surface actuator, a battery, or all or a portion of the fuselage, etc., and the method can automatically update a database of log data specific to the UAV to account for such change. For example, the method can calculate a relationship between air speed of the UAV and current draw of the motor during the test flight, compare this calculated relationship to a similar relationship calculated for the UAV during a previous flight or test flight to determine if a new motor was swapped into the UAV prior to the current test flight, and update a log of specific to the UAV to reflect this change in motors. In particular, in this example, the method can reset a time counter for a motor within the UAV to “0” to reflect detected installation of a new motor into the UAV.
  • The method can therefore collect data from a UAV and manipulate these data to modify pre-calculated flight paths and to log use of various (critical) components of the UAV. The method can therefore execute remotely from the UAV, such as on a remote computer system that generates missions for one or more UAVs (e.g., a fleet of UAVs) according to selected ground areas of interest and/or that controls UAVs remotely during execution of missions. The computer system can be a cloud-based computer (e.g., Amazon EC2), a mainframe computer system, a grid-computer system, or any other suitable computer system. For example, the computer system can be a remote server that communicates with one or more UAVs over HTTP (or TCP or UDP) protocols through a web service (e.g., Amazon AWS). The computer system can thus transmit data (e.g., mission commands, flight paths, UAV location, UAV operation data) to and from a UAV over a cellular, Wi-Fi, satellite, or other suitable wireless network. Alternatively, the method can be implemented on a local computing device. For example, a local flight control station specific to one or more UAVs and including a wireless radio can implement the method to communicate with the UAV(s) directly over a cellular communication protocol before, during, and/or upon completion of the mission. Yet alternatively, the method can be implemented by a computing device arranged in the UAV within the fleet. For example, a UAV can incorporate a processor that interfaces with an autopilot module and a wireless transceiver within the UAV to collect UAV operation data (e.g., GPS data, telemetry data, sensor status data, network connectivity data, etc.), to manipulate the UAV operation data, to log the operation data, to transmit prompts to an operator, and/or to modify a flightpath according to detected limitations of the UAV. However, the method can be implemented by any one or more of a remote computer system, a local flight control station, or one local computing device arranged in a UAV. For example, in a default setting, the method can be implemented by the remote computer system but, when long-range wireless (e.g., cellular) communication with the fleet is lost, a local computing device within a UAV can assume a master control position and implement remaining elements of the method until long-range wireless communication is regained. However, the method can be implemented in any other suitable way.
  • The method can therefore execute in conjunction with a UAV that includes: flight control surfaces; actuators configured to manipulate the flight control surfaces; a motor; a prop; an autopilot module configured to control the actuators and the propulsion assembly according to a scheduled flightpath; a co-pilot module providing an interface between a remote computer network and the autopilot module, actuators within the UAV, and sensors within the UAV; and a fuselage supporting the flight control surfaces, the actuators, the autopilot module, the propulsion assembly, and the co-pilot module, as shown in FIG. 2 . The UAV can also include various sensors, such as a three-dimensional optical sensor, (e.g., a LIDAY system, a stereoscopic camera), a two-dimensional sensor (e.g., a CMOS digital camera, a thermal imaging sensor), and/or a single-dimensional sensor (e.g., a chemical sensor, a temperature sensor, a barometric sensor), etc., that capture data during missions executed by the UAV, and the co-pilot module can interface with a wireless communication module within the UAV to upload data from these sensors (and actuator data) to a remote database executing all or a portion of the method. The UAV can therefore include a fixed-wing aircraft. Alternatively, the UAV can include a vertical takeoff and landing (VTOL) aircraft. The UAV can also be a component of an unmanned aerial system (UAS) that includes sensors, ground control software (GCS), infrastructure (e.g., radios, a mission control station), support crews, maintenance crews, etc.
  • S110 includes receiving a set of a pre-calculated mission parameters corresponding to an initial UAV mission. The set of pre-calculated mission parameters preferably include a UAV flightpath (specified by global coordinates or any other coordinate system, including local coordinate systems), but may additionally or alternatively include any parameters corresponding to a UAV mission (e.g., altitude, air speed, ground speed, flight time, flight control surface positions, camera shutter events, actuator settings, etc.). For example, the set of pre-calculated mission parameters may include a set of waypoints for the UAV to fly along, along with a set of parameters specifying when a UAV camera should take aerial photographs along the route.
  • S110 preferably includes receiving pre-calculated mission parameters at the UAV from a remote server over a wireless internet connection (e.g., a cellular connection), but may additionally or alternatively include receiving pre-calculated mission parameters in any suitable manner (e.g., via a flash drive plugged into the UAV).
  • S120 includes initiating execution of the initial UAV mission. S120 functions to begin UAV flight (and/or other operations) according to the pre-calculated mission parameters. The method 100 may include S120 for a number of reasons; e.g., if the UAV is expected to be able to complete the initial mission. If data collected during the initial UAV mission indicates a less-than-satisfactory mission outcome (as collected and analyzed in S130), the mission may be modified (S140 and S150).
  • S125 includes executing a pre-mission test. In one implementation, the pre-mission test is a standardized test defining a test flightpath suitable to test various components of the UAV, such as a motor, a battery, a prop, a fuselage, and/or control surfaces of the UAV, and the co-pilot within the UAV can interface with various sensors and actuators within the UAV to collect data for these components as the UAV executes the test flightpath. For example, the pre-mission test can define: a first portion of the test flightpath specifying level flight at an altitude of loom at full power from which a maximum air speed of the UAV is determined; a second portion of the test flightpath specifying a near-vertical climb from loom altitude from which a maximum thrust of the UAV is determined; a third portion of the test flightpath specifying a decrease in air speed until stall is achieved from which a stall speed of the UAV is determined; a fourth portion of the test flightpath specifying a cycling ramping the motor from a no-power to a full-power setting from which a motor torque curve, a maximum motor torque, a motor efficiency curve, a propeller efficiency, a battery state of charge, and/or a maximum battery supply current, etc. of the UAV is calculated; and a fifth portion of the test flightpath specifying cycles of pitch, yaw, and/or roll control surfaces from which an efficiency of the fuselage and/or a weight of the fuselage is calculated. For example, the total standardized pre-mission test sequence can be completed within a period of sixty seconds prior to execution of a mission thirty-minutes in duration. However, the standardized pre-mission test sequence can define any other flightpaths or operations from which various UAV parameters or functions can be calculated.
  • Pre-mission tests may test any UAV components, including any sensors coupled to the UAV (e.g., cameras, chemical sensors, photodetectors, microphones, RADAR/SONAR sensors, etc.)
  • In addition or as an alternative to UAV component tests, pre-mission tests may include flightpaths or other operations directed to measuring characteristics of the flight environment (e.g., air temperature, wind speed, obstacles present in a particular area, etc.).
  • In one variation, S125 may include performing an “on-boarding” flight test when a (new) UAV is added to a UAV fleet or during a “reset” flight test following a rebuild. For example, the UAV can takeoff, execute the pre-mission test sequence, offload any of the foregoing data to the remote UAV management network, and then land again without executing another mission, S130 can characterize the UAV from these data, and the remote UAV management network can implement this characterization of the UAV when generating flight paths and flight parameters of the UAV in subsequent missions designating the UAV and elected by an operator.
  • The method 100 may include either or both of S120 and S125. For example, the method may include performing a pre-mission test (S125), passing the pre-mission test, and then initiating execution of the initial mission without modification (S120).
  • S130 includes collecting UAV operation data during flight of the UAV. S130 functions to collect UAV operation data (e.g., UAV component data, UAV sensor data, environmental data, etc.) for purposes of modifying the initial UAV mission.
  • UAV operation data preferably includes any data relevant to UAV operation; e.g., air speed, heading, ground speed, position, orientation, camera data, air temperature data, actuator status, sensor data, payload data, UAV communication data, UAV flightpath, and humidity. In particular, UAV communication data may include mission parameters transmitted/received by other UAVs. For example, a first UAV may update a flightpath for aerial photography and then transmit that updated flightpath to other UAVs. If the new flightpath intersects with any other UAV's flightpath, the intersecting UAV may alter its flightpath to avoid covering the same area redundantly (unless overlapping coverage is desired).
  • S130 may be performed at any time, including during a pre-mission test and/or in real-time during a mission.
  • S130 preferably includes collecting UAV operation data at the UAV, but may additionally or alternatively include transmitting UAV operation data to be collected by a remote computer. For example, the UAV co-pilot (or other processor, memory module, etc.) within the UAV can sample the autopilot, various sensors, and various actuators within the UAV, such as according to an internal or external clock and a preset sampling rate (e.g., 20 Hz) and then upload these data substantially in real-time to a remote computer network over wireless communication. A remote UAV management network can receive data downloaded from the co-pilot over cellular communication protocol as these data are collected at the UAV. Alternatively, collected data could be retrieved in bulk upon completion (or abortion) of a mission or pre-mission test sequence.
  • S130 may include processing raw data received at the UAV (or remote computer). For example, S130 may include calculating a motor efficiency based on motor rotational speed and airspeed.
  • In one example, S130 includes receiving an output voltage (and/or an output current) of a main battery within the UAV at various throttle settings of the motor, such as at 0%, 25%, 50%, 75%, and 100% throttle settings, and then transforming these voltage readings into battery state of charge based on a known discharge curve of the battery. S130 can alternatively include integrating a current output of the battery over time, implementing Kalman filtering, or monitoring an internal pressure of the battery to calculate a state of charge of the battery. S130 can then calculate a range of the UAV based on the state of charge of the UAV, and also accommodate for wind conditions over a ground area over which the UAV will fly during the mission to calculate total ground distance that the UAV can traverse in its current state. In another example, S130 can record collect steady state temperatures within the fuselage for various throttle settings of the motor, and calculate a maximum allowable throttle setting or a maximum allowable current draw for the current mission based on a maximum allowable battery and/or fuselage temperature for the UAV. In a similar example, S130 can collect steady state temperatures of the motor at various throttle settings, and identify a maximum air speed of the UAV based on a maximum allowable temperature of the motor. In another example, S130 can collect acceleration and rotation data from an accelerometer and a gyroscope arranged within the UAV during various maneuvers executed by the UAV during the pre-mission test sequence, and characterize pitch, yaw, and roll responses of the UAV to manipulation of the control surfaces to detect a stability of the UAV flight. In this example, S130 can determine that the UAV is unstable and therefore unfit for flight if the UAV exhibits extreme changes pitch, yaw, and/or roll in response to a small change in the position of a control surface, if the UAV exhibits no change in pitch, yaw, and/or roll in response to a large change in the position of a control surface, or if constant manipulation of the control surfaces is required for the UAV to fly in a straight line. In this example, S130 can also determine a tightest turning radius (at one or more cruise speeds), climb rate, and/or descent rate of the UAV from these rotation and acceleration data. However, S130 can collect and/or receive UAV operation data in any other way and extract any one or more UAV characteristics from these data.
  • In one implementation, S130 is executed by a computer network that receives data from the UAV in raw, unprocessed form or in compressed form; the network can then process these data to determine if the UAV is capable of competing a current mission (within a reasonable degree of certainty). Alternatively, the UAV can execute all or a portion of S130 locally and then upload results (e.g., a calculated motor torque curve, maximum motor torque, motor efficiency curve, propeller efficiency, battery state of charge, maximum battery supply current, etc.) to the computer network.
  • S140 includes calculating a set of modified mission parameters based on the UAV operation data. S140 is preferably executed in response to a determination or estimation that the UAV is unable to complete the initial mission, based on data collected during the pre-mission test and/or execution of the initial mission. Additionally or alternatively, S140 may be performed at any time in response to any stimulus; for example, a set of modified mission parameters may be calculated in response to a user request for mission modification.
  • S140 may include comparing UAV characteristics (as collected and processed in S130) to characteristics required for performance of the set of pre-calculated mission parameters to determine if the UAV is capable of completing the mission as currently defined and/or what modification to the mission may be necessary to increase odds of success.
  • In one implementation, UAV component data is manipulated to generate a curve defining predicted total ground distance that can be covered by the UAV relative to ground speed of the UAV, based on a state of charge of the battery within the UAV, a curve defining a relationship between air speed and battery output power (and bounded by the maximum air speed and stall speed of the UAV), and a current (or forecast) weather condition (e.g., wind speed and direction) at the location specified in the mission (e.g., as collected from a remote weather database). In this implementation, a total ground distance that must be covered by the UAV to complete the mission as currently defined can be calculated and compared to a maximum total ground distance that can be traversed by the UAV in its current state to determine if the UAV can complete the mission. (In this implementation, local weather (e.g., wind) data can be applied to this comparison, such as by accessing local wind data from a remote weather database.) If the total ground distance required to complete the mission does not exceed the total estimated ground range of the UAV, the UAV can begin the mission as currently prescribed. Alternatively, an air speed specified in the mission parameters can be adjusted to increase an efficiency of the UAV during the mission, such as by setting a target air speed of the UAV at an air speed corresponding to a best compromise of maximum motor efficiency and maximum battery efficiency, and updating parameters of the mission to reflect this new target air speed for the UAV during execution of the mission. Alternatively, S140 can calculate a maximum air speed of the UAV at which the UAV can still complete the mission in order to reduce total flight time of the UAV (and therefore total operator cost) for completion of the mission, update parameters of the mission to reflect this new target air speed for the UAV.
  • However, in this implementation, if the total ground distance to be covered by the UAV during the mission exceeds the total range capacity of the UAV, S140 can include altering the mission to accommodate this deficiency of the UAV. For example, S140 can change a primary direction of flight of the UAV during the mission to reduce a duration of the mission over which the UAV flies directly into the wind, thereby extending a ground distance that can be traversed by the UAV during execution of the updated mission. In another example in which the mission specifies a ground area of interest for the UAV to image with a camera installed therein, S140 can reduce a size of the ground area of interest such that a total ground distance that the UAV must cover to achieve a target lateral step-over distance and a target longitudinal step-over distance between images captured by the UAV without exceeding the estimated total ground range of the UAV, such as shown in FIG. 3 . In a similar example, in which the mission specifies a ground area of interest for the UAV to image with a camera installed therein, S140 can increase an altitude at which the UAV is to capture images of a specified ground area to reduce a number of cut-back sections of the flight path of the mission to reduce a total ground distance that must be covered by the UAV to fully image the area of interest. In another example, S140 can determine that a target cruise speed of the UAV is to low or too high for the UAV to complete the mission as currently specified, and S140 can thus set a new target cruise speed for the mission such that the UAV can operate at an improved efficiency sufficient to complete other parameters of the mission. In yet another example, S140 includes splitting the mission into segments. Mission segments may then be executed serially or in parallel by one or more UAVs.
  • S140 can therefore handle data from multiple UAVs to generate and/or manipulate corresponding missions parameters. However, S140 can alter any other parameter of the mission.
  • In one implementation, a UAV executes a mission to take aerial photographs of a particular area. The photographs collected by the UAV are analyzed in S130 (by the UAV and/or by a remote computer); any images deemed unsatisfactory (e.g., a particular area covered in shadow, a blurry photograph) may result in the flight plan of the UAV being modified to recapture the areas of issue.
  • In another implementation, a UAV executes a mission following an oil pipeline while taking samples with a hydrocarbon sensor. If the UAV detects anomalies in sensed hydrocarbon data collected in S130 (e.g., an unexpectedly high level of a particular hydrocarbon), the mission may be altered by S140 to provide further information on areas containing the anomalies (e.g., the flightplan may be altered to a spiral pattern mapping a circle centered on the anomaly).
  • In a variation of a preferred embodiment, S140 may include prompting an operator to select a type of change to be made to the mission and/or to confirm a proposed change to the mission. For example, S140 can present prompts to the operator—such as through an operator interface accessed through a web browser—to select one of longer mission time (e.g., due to reduced UAV cruise speed), reduced image resolution (e.g., due to increased altitude during imaging passes or increased step-over distance between imaging passes), or reduced size of ground area of interest (e.g., from removal of a portion of the original ground area of interest from the modified mission). In another example, S140 can prompt the user to set a position of a slider bar along a continuous slider defining a “greatest distance” position at one extreme and a “longest mission time” at an opposite extreme, and S140 can adjust parameters of the mission according to a compromise elected by the user through manipulation of the slider bar, as shown in FIG. 4 . In another example, S140 can prompt the operator to confirm the modification, to cancel to mission, or to select a different UAV to perform the mission. S140 can also account for a margin of safety for calculating a range of the UAV and modifying mission parameters according to substantially ensure that the UAV will successfully land in a designated area.
  • In this variation, S140 can then upload an updated mission (or discrete modified parameters of the mission) to the UAV followed by a trigger to begin execution of the updated mission.
  • In yet another variation of a preferred embodiment, S140 can determine that the UAV cannot complete the mission as currently defined or receive confirmation from an operator to abort the mission, and thus order grounding of the UAV (performed by S150). For example, S150 can transmit a prompt to the UAV to immediately execute a landing sequence defined at an end of the mission currently loaded onto the UAV.
  • S150 includes initiating execution of the modified mission on the UAV. S150 preferably includes implementing modifications to the initial mission indicated by the modified mission parameters calculated in S140. S150 preferably includes executing modified mission parameters in real-time (e.g., if mission parameters are updated mid-mission) but may additionally or alternatively execute modified mission parameters at any time. For example, if modified mission parameters are calculated based on data collected during a pre-flight test, the modified mission parameters may be implemented whenever the modified mission is scheduled to begin (e.g., immediately after the pre-flight test, after a re-charge following the pre-flight test, or at any other time).
  • Data Logging
  • The method 100 may additionally include logging operation data of the UAV collected during execution of the prescribed mission by the UAV, and/or prompting an operator associated with the UAV to exchange a component within the UAV based on the operation data and a projected life of the component if necessary. Generally, logging operation data functions to collect data pertaining to use of the UAV and its subsystems over the course of various missions and to aggregate this data into logs through which discrete components or subsystems of the UAV can be monitored. Furthermore, as the UAV completes one mission after the next and as components and subsystems within exhibit increasing amounts of wear, component and subsystem logs can be compared to regulated or recommended component and subsystem lifespans and deliver prompts for preemptively exchanging components and subsystems of the UAV before predicted or projected failure.
  • A variety of data can be collected from the UAV during across various missions, such as a number of hours that the UAV is in flight, battery charge/discharge cycles, takeoffs and landings, ground or air distance travel, motor rotations, peak or average fuselage temperature, sun exposure, moisture (e.g., rain) exposure, peak or average battery temperature, peak battery output current and voltage, peak or average motor temperature, pitch, yaw, and roll response, maximum altitude, peak or average speed, etc. and then augment discrete logs for each critical component and subsystem within the UAV with these monitored data. This data may be collected as UAV operation data in S130 or may be collected independently/for other purposes. Data may be collected in real-time as the UAV executes a mission or at any other time; data collected can include raw sensor and actuator data from the UAV, or the UAV can compress any of these data and then transmit compressed flight data to the remote UAV management network.
  • In one example, discrete logs are maintained for each of a battery, a motor, a prop, a fuselage, control surface actuators, and/or any other high-wear or critical component or subsystem within a particular UAV, and these logs are stored on the remote UAV management network, in a remote database, and/or locally on the UAV, such as in memory within the co-pilot module. In this example, the UAV can distribute mission hours, charge/discharge cycle data, peak or average battery temperature, peak battery output current and voltage, and peak or average fuselage temperature to a battery-specific log; distribute mission hours, motor rotations, peak battery output current and voltage, and peak or average motor and fuselage temperature to a motor-specific log; and distribute mission hours, pitch, yaw, and roll response, maximum altitude, peak or average speed, sun exposure, moisture exposure, takeoff and landing data, and peak or average fuselage temperature to a fuselage-specific log.
  • Logs can be stored for components and/or subsystems of a UAV under a substantially unique identifier for the UAV or high-priority component within the UAV. For example, component and subsystems logs can be stored under an identifier pointing to the co-pilot module within the UAV, such as to a unique serial number or wireless communication address of the co-pilot. Alternatively, component and subsystems logs can be stored under an identifier pointing to a serial number of the fuselage or to a serial number or GPS address of the autopilot module within the UAV. UAV data can thus be stored under a unique identifier for that UAV to distinguish data from other UAVs (e.g., in a fleet of UAVs).
  • Furthermore, the UAV can maintain a database of component and subsystem regulated and/or manufacture-suggested part lives, compare a log for each critical component or subsystem within the UAV to these regulated and/or manufacture-suggested part lives, and deliver prompts to exchange components or subsystems within the UAV to an operator accordingly. For example, a manufacturer of a motor currently installed in the UAV can suggest a maximum useful life of 100 hours for the motor, the UAV can count each minute that the UAV in flight with the current motor, and transmit a prompt to exchange the motor to an account of an operator of the UAV when the number of hours on the motor reaches 95 hours, 98 hours, and 99 hours. In this example, the prompt can be accessed by the operator through a notification within a native UAV management application executing on a mobile computing device (e.g., a smartphone, a tablet), or through a web browser executing on a computing device (e.g., a desktop computer, a laptop computer, a tablet). In another example, a government (e.g., federal) regulation can stipulate a maximum time of 200 hours, a maximum of two crashes, a maximum of 100 takeoffs, and a maximum heat exposure within a fuselage of 16,000° F.-hours (i.e., an integral of fuselage temperature over time in the air) for a UAV fuselage of the type (e.g., size) of the UAV, and the UAV can track each of these parameters in a fuselage-specific log for the UAV. In this example, the UAV can identify an upcoming breach of any of these regulated parameters by the UAV (or breach of the regulation in the event of a third crash) and deliver a corresponding notification to the operator to replace the fuselage of the UAV with a new fuselage (i.e., to move other actuators, sensors, and controllers from the old fuselage to the new fuselage).
  • Such prompts can be delivered to the operator at the beginning of a mission involving the UAV, during the mission with the UAV when a component within UAV approaches or surpasses one or more regulated or suggested lifespan, upon completion of the mission, and/or when the operator and/or the UAV are near a repair shop or service center. The UAV or UAV platform can also point the operator to stored log data of the UAV and/or to UAV data specific to component of the UAV referenced in the prompt. For example, an application can retrieve and open log data of the UAV in response to selection of the prompt. Operator access to UAV log data can therefore be handled through prompts (e.g., notifications).
  • The UAV (and/or platform) can similarly cooperate to detect components of the UAV that have already failed and to deliver corresponding prompts to the operator to replace the failed component(s) accordingly. However, the method 100 can function in any other way to log use of one or more components and/or subsystems of the UAV over a series of missions and to deliver any other suitable UAV maintenance prompt to an associated operator or operator account.
  • Component Update
  • The method 100 may additionally or alternatively include detecting a recent modification to a component installed in the UAV based on the operation data and an operation history of the UAV, and/or updating a flight record of the UAV according to the detected modification. Generally, detecting a recent modification functions to characterize operation of one or more current components or subsystems of the UAV and to compare these characterizations to previous characterizations of components and/or subsystems within the UAV to detect a possible recent exchange of a component or subsystem of the UAV. In particular, the detection process can extract a characteristic of a battery, a motor, a prop, a control surface actuator, and/or a fuselage of the UAV, etc. from UAV flight data collected during execution of a current pre-mission test sequence and/or a current mission and then compare these characteristics to characteristics of the same part types extracted from UAV data collected during execution of an immediately preceding pre-mission test sequence and/or an immediately preceding mission to detect a change in one or more characteristics that would suggest that one or more components (or subsystems) within the UAV was exchanged between the current and the preceding mission. Updates to the flight record can then function to automatically update a component or subsystem log to reflect a new component or subsystem installed into UAV, such as by resetting a log of a corresponding component or subsystem for total hours, heat exposure, takeoffs, and/or crashes, etc.
  • The method 100 characterizes UAV components from UAV data collected during pre-mission test sequences executed by the UAV before each mission such that characterizations may be generated from UAV data generated under substantially similar conditions (i.e., test flight paths) across various missions on various different dates. UAV data can be characterized wherein the data is collected from an end (e.g., a final two minutes) of a previous flight, from a beginning (e.g., a first two minutes) of a current flight, and these characterizations are compared to automatically detect a change to a component or subsystem installed in the UAV.
  • In one example, the method 100 models a change in UAV air speed relative to a change in motor speed from current UAV data and detects that the prop of the UAV was replaced with a different (e.g., new) prop if the new model for UAV air speed relative to motor speed differs from a model for UAV air speed relative to motor speed calculated during a previous mission by more than a threshold amount. In this example, the method 100 can interface with an air speed sensor, or can calculate an air speed of the UAV based on a local wind speed and direction (retrieved from a weather database), GPS coordinates of the UAV, and a UAV trajectory.
  • In another example, the method 100 models a current draw of the motor relative to UAV air speed and detects that the motor of the UAV was replaced with a different (e.g., new) motor if the new model for motor current draw relative to UAV air speed differs from a similar model calculated during a previous mission by more than a threshold amount. In this example, the method 100 can also compensate for a prop change in this model. The method 100 can also compare the new motor current draw v. UAV air speed model to similar models of motor types currently available and suitable for the fuselage to predict what motor type was installed into the fuselage.
  • In yet another example, the method 100 models a sensitivity of the pitch, yaw, and roll of the UAV to changes in flight surfaces and compare this model to a similar model generated during a previous mission to determine if the fuselage of the UAV was repaired or replaced. The method 100 can also manipulate this current model in comparison to the previous model to detect changes to a payload carried by the UAV, to detect structure added to or removed from the fuselage, to detect a change in (or a new position of) a center of gravity of the UAV, or to detect a change in the weight of the UAV.
  • In another example, the method 100 models an output voltage of a battery within the UAV relative to throttle setting and compares this new model to a similar previous model to detect replacement of a battery previously installed in the UAV with a new battery.
  • As in these examples, the method 100 can also prompt an operator to confirm a detected change of a battery, motor, fuselage, or prop, etc. in the UAV, to enter whether the component is new, used, or refurnished, and/or to enter a make and model of the replaced component, etc. The UAV can then update a log corresponding to an exchanged component accordingly.
  • The method can implement similar methods and techniques to process UAV data in real-time and to make adjustment to UAV parameters substantially in real-time during execution of the current mission. For example, the method can monitor a state of charge of a battery within the UAV during a flight and then return the UAV to a launch site (or rally point, landing area, takeoff area, etc.) if the battery level approaches or reaches a threshold minimum state required to reliably return the UAV to an operator. In another example, the method can monitor local weather conditions—such as through sensors within the UAV or data retrieved from a remote weather database—and react to changing weather conditions by changing flight parameters of the UAV (e.g., speed, direction, attitude, subregion of a ground area of interest to fly over, etc.). In yet another example, the method can detect changes to the UAV and/or failures of component of the UAV while in flight and then automatically execute a corrective action (e.g., to execute a glide landing routine to land the UAV in a designated landing area in response to a detected motor failure) and/or deliver a prompt to an operator to take a corrective action accordingly. The method can therefore implement a ‘continuous test sequence’ (similar to the pre-mission test sequence) to collect and handle UAV data during execution of a mission. However, the method can implement any other method or technique to collect and handle data from one or more UAVs.
  • The UAV and methods of the invention can be embodied and/or implemented at least in part as a machine configured to receive a computer-readable medium storing computer-readable instructions. The instructions can be executed by computer-executable components integrated with the vehicle, scheduling kiosk(s), a remote scheduling server, hardware/firmware/software elements of a user computer or mobile device, or any suitable combination thereof. Other systems and methods of the invention can be embodied and/or implemented at least in part as a machine configured to receive a computer-readable medium storing computer-readable instructions. The instructions can be executed by computer-executable components integrated by computer-executable components integrated with apparatuses and networks of the type described above. The computer-readable medium can be stored on any suitable computer readable media such as RAMs, ROMs, flash memory, EEPROMs, optical devices (CD or DVD), hard drives, floppy drives, or any suitable device. The computer-executable component can be a processor but any suitable dedicated hardware device can (alternatively or additionally) execute the instructions.
  • As a person skilled in the art will recognize from the previous detailed description and from the figures and claims, modifications and changes can be made to the embodiments of the invention without departing from the scope of this invention as defined in the following claims.

Claims (21)

1.-20. (canceled)
21. A system comprising:
an unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV) comprising an onboard camera; and
a processor communicatively coupled to the UAV and configured to:
receive a set of mission parameters corresponding to a UAV mission;
initiate execution of the UAV mission;
receive UAV operation data during the UAV mission, the UAV operation data comprising aerial images;
calculate a set of modified mission parameters from the set of mission parameters and an analysis of the aerial images, the set of modified mission parameters corresponding to a modified UAV mission; and
automatically execute the modified UAV mission with the UAV.
22. The system of claim 21, wherein the processor is wirelessly connected to the UAV during the UAV mission.
23. The system of claim 21, further comprising:
executing a flight sequence with the UAV evaluating: level flight at a first altitude with determination of a first parameter of the UAV and a climb to a second altitude with determination of a second parameter of the UAV.
24. The system of claim 23, wherein the first parameter is associated with a first image resolution and the second parameter is associated with a second image resolution.
25. The system of claim 24, wherein the set of modified mission parameters are configured to allow images to be captured at the second image resolution.
26. The system of claim 21, wherein the analysis comprises: at a mobile user device comprising the processor, identifying an image artifact based on the UAV operation data.
27. The system of claim 21, wherein the analysis comprises evaluating an image resolution of the UAV operation data at a mobile user device during execution of the UAV mission.
28. The system of claim 21, wherein the analysis comprises a range analysis; wherein the set of modified mission parameters are configured to decrease an image resolution associated with the UAV mission based on a range parameter for the UAV.
29. The system of claim 21, wherein the set of mission parameters are determined based on: level flight at a first altitude with determination of an airspeed parameter of the UAV, a climb to a second altitude with determination of a thrust parameter of the UAV, and a transition of a motor of the UAV from a first to a second power setting with determination of a range of the UAV and a weight parameter of the UAV.
30. A system, comprising:
a non-transitory computer readable medium; and
a processor coupled to the non-transitory computer readable medium, the processor configured to:
receive a set of mission parameters corresponding to a UAV mission, wherein the set of mission parameters are determined based on level flight at a first altitude with determination of a first parameter of the UAV and a climb to a second altitude with determination of a second parameter of the UAV;
initiate execution of the UAV mission with collection of a UAV operation dataset during the UAV mission; and
modify behavior of the UAV based on an analysis of the UAV operation dataset.
31. The system of claim 30, wherein the processor is further configured to transition a motor of the UAV from a first to a second power setting based on determination of a third parameter of the UAV.
32. The system of claim 30, wherein the first parameter is a first airspeed parameter or a first thrust parameter; wherein the second parameter is a second airspeed parameter or a second thrust parameter.
33. The system of claim 30, wherein the first parameter is associated with a first image resolution and the second parameter is associated with a second image resolution.
34. The system of claim 33, wherein modifying behavior of the UAV comprises modifying the set of mission parameters to allow images to be captured at a first image resolution.
35. The system of claim 30, wherein modifying behavior of the UAV comprises: calculating a set of modified mission parameters based on the first parameter and the set of mission parameters; and initiating execution of a modified UAV mission based on the set of modified mission parameters.
36. The system of claim 30, wherein the analysis comprises evaluating an image resolution of the UAV operation dataset at a mobile user device during execution of the UAV mission.
37. The system of claim 30, wherein the analysis comprises: at a mobile user device, identifying an image artifact based on the UAV operation dataset.
38. The system of claim 30, wherein the analysis comprises: tracking at least one of: a motor speed parameter, a propeller usage parameter, a control surface actuator usage parameter, or a fuselage usage parameter of the UAV during the mission; and generating a comparison between of at least one of the motor speed parameter, the propeller usage parameter, a control surface actuator usage parameter, or a fuselage usage parameter to a respective life limit.
39. The system of claim 30, wherein the analysis comprises a range analysis; wherein modifying behavior of the UAV comprises decreasing an image resolution of the UAV mission based on a range parameter of the UAV.
40. The system of claim 30, wherein the processor is housed within a mobile device and is wirelessly connected to the UAV.
US18/359,717 2014-05-20 2023-07-26 Method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle Pending US20240017826A1 (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US18/359,717 US20240017826A1 (en) 2014-05-20 2023-07-26 Method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle

Applications Claiming Priority (7)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US201462000933P 2014-05-20 2014-05-20
US201462045473P 2014-09-03 2014-09-03
US14/717,955 US9688403B2 (en) 2014-05-20 2015-05-20 Method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle
US15/601,867 US10196142B2 (en) 2014-05-20 2017-05-22 Method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle
US16/230,363 US11059581B2 (en) 2014-05-20 2018-12-21 Method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle
US17/344,229 US11745876B2 (en) 2014-05-20 2021-06-10 Method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle
US18/359,717 US20240017826A1 (en) 2014-05-20 2023-07-26 Method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle

Related Parent Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US17/344,229 Continuation US11745876B2 (en) 2014-05-20 2021-06-10 Method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US20240017826A1 true US20240017826A1 (en) 2024-01-18

Family

ID=54555510

Family Applications (5)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US14/717,955 Active US9688403B2 (en) 2014-05-20 2015-05-20 Method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle
US15/601,867 Active 2035-07-20 US10196142B2 (en) 2014-05-20 2017-05-22 Method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle
US16/230,363 Active 2036-03-11 US11059581B2 (en) 2014-05-20 2018-12-21 Method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle
US17/344,229 Active 2035-09-22 US11745876B2 (en) 2014-05-20 2021-06-10 Method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle
US18/359,717 Pending US20240017826A1 (en) 2014-05-20 2023-07-26 Method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle

Family Applications Before (4)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US14/717,955 Active US9688403B2 (en) 2014-05-20 2015-05-20 Method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle
US15/601,867 Active 2035-07-20 US10196142B2 (en) 2014-05-20 2017-05-22 Method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle
US16/230,363 Active 2036-03-11 US11059581B2 (en) 2014-05-20 2018-12-21 Method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle
US17/344,229 Active 2035-09-22 US11745876B2 (en) 2014-05-20 2021-06-10 Method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (5) US9688403B2 (en)

Families Citing this family (93)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
DK2991897T3 (en) 2013-05-03 2020-03-09 Aerovironment Inc VERTICAL TAKE OFF AND LANDING (VTOL) AIRCRAFT
US9573684B2 (en) * 2013-10-26 2017-02-21 Amazon Technologies, Inc. Unmanned aerial vehicle delivery system
DE102014105583A1 (en) * 2014-04-11 2015-10-15 Deutsche Post Ag Arrangement for transferring a consignment
US9273981B1 (en) 2014-05-12 2016-03-01 Unmanned Innovation, Inc. Distributed unmanned aerial vehicle architecture
WO2015175440A1 (en) 2014-05-12 2015-11-19 Unmanned Innovation, Inc. Unmanned aerial vehicle authorization and geofence envelope determination
US9688403B2 (en) 2014-05-20 2017-06-27 Infatics, Inc. Method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle
US9824592B2 (en) * 2014-09-22 2017-11-21 Vinveli Unmanned Systems, Inc. Method and apparatus for ensuring the operation and integrity of a three-dimensional integrated logistical system
JP6174258B2 (en) * 2014-09-30 2017-08-02 エスゼット ディージェイアイ テクノロジー カンパニー リミテッドSz Dji Technology Co.,Ltd Flight instruction method, flight instruction device, and aircraft
US9348333B1 (en) * 2014-12-08 2016-05-24 Amazon Technologies, Inc. Modular air delivery
US9305280B1 (en) 2014-12-22 2016-04-05 Amazon Technologies, Inc. Airborne fulfillment center utilizing unmanned aerial vehicles for item delivery
US10049583B2 (en) * 2015-02-01 2018-08-14 Clearag, Inc. Flight condition evaluation and protection for unmanned aerial vehicles and remotely-piloted vehicles
WO2016130847A1 (en) 2015-02-11 2016-08-18 Aerovironment, Inc. Pod launch and landing system for vertical take-off and landing (vtol) unmanned aerial vehicles (uavs)
WO2016130721A2 (en) 2015-02-11 2016-08-18 Aerovironment, Inc. Survey migration system for vertical take-off and landing (vtol) unmanned aerial vehicles (uavs)
WO2016130716A2 (en) 2015-02-11 2016-08-18 Aerovironment, Inc. Geographic survey system for vertical take-off and landing (vtol) unmanned aerial vehicles (uavs)
US10850866B2 (en) 2015-02-11 2020-12-01 Aerovironment, Inc. Pod cover system for a vertical take-off and landing (VTOL) unmanned aerial vehicle (UAV)
WO2016130711A1 (en) * 2015-02-11 2016-08-18 Aerovironment, Inc. Pod operating system for a vertical take-off and landing (vtol) unmanned aerial vehicle (uav)
US9501061B2 (en) 2015-02-24 2016-11-22 Qualcomm Incorporated Near-flight testing maneuvers for autonomous aircraft
US9469394B2 (en) 2015-03-10 2016-10-18 Qualcomm Incorporated Adjustable weight distribution for drone
US9741255B1 (en) 2015-05-28 2017-08-22 Amazon Technologies, Inc. Airborne unmanned aerial vehicle monitoring station
US9715235B2 (en) * 2015-06-05 2017-07-25 The Boeing Company Autonomous unmanned aerial vehicle decision-making
US9818303B2 (en) * 2015-06-16 2017-11-14 Verizon Patent And Licensing Inc. Dynamic navigation of UAVs using three dimensional network coverage information
US10480953B2 (en) * 2015-07-07 2019-11-19 Halliburton Energy Services, Inc. Semi-autonomous monitoring system
US10099561B1 (en) 2015-09-25 2018-10-16 Amazon Technologies, Inc. Airborne unmanned aerial vehicle charging
US9421869B1 (en) * 2015-09-25 2016-08-23 Amazon Technologies, Inc. Deployment and adjustment of airborne unmanned aerial vehicles
US9964966B1 (en) * 2015-09-28 2018-05-08 Amazon Technologies, Inc. Controlling mechanical vibrations
CN105278544B (en) * 2015-10-30 2018-05-08 小米科技有限责任公司 The control method and device of unmanned vehicle
US9840328B2 (en) * 2015-11-23 2017-12-12 Northrop Grumman Systems Corporation UAS platforms flying capabilities by capturing top human pilot skills and tactics
CN108473200A (en) * 2015-12-22 2018-08-31 英特尔公司 For in multi-rotor unmanned aerial vehicle(UAV)In strong track following general purpose controller
US10053236B1 (en) * 2016-03-28 2018-08-21 Amazon Technologies, Inc. Automated aerial vehicle inspections
US10169735B2 (en) * 2016-04-18 2019-01-01 Qualcomm Incorporated Customized packaging for unmanned autonomous vehicle item delivery
WO2017184806A1 (en) * 2016-04-20 2017-10-26 Worcester Polytechnic Institute Airborne vehicle recovery
CN109074040A (en) * 2016-05-30 2018-12-21 深圳市大疆创新科技有限公司 Flight restriction based on operating parameter
IT201600080323A1 (en) * 2016-07-29 2018-01-29 Fabio Presicce METHOD AND SYSTEM OF TRANSMISSION OF FLOW DATA OF IMAGE AND / OR VIDEO AND DRONE DATA COUPLED TO THESE SYSTEM
WO2018032416A1 (en) * 2016-08-17 2018-02-22 张琬彬 Method and system for controlling unmanned aerial vehicle rotation speed
US10163357B2 (en) 2016-08-24 2018-12-25 Qualcomm Incorporated Navigation assistance data and route planning for drones
US10837813B2 (en) 2016-08-25 2020-11-17 The Trustees Of Princeton University Nanowires integration for real-time compensation
US10068489B2 (en) * 2016-08-31 2018-09-04 Skycatch, Inc. Managing energy during flight of unmanned aerial vehicles for safe return to ground
US11100589B1 (en) 2016-09-02 2021-08-24 State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Company Systems and methods for analyzing unmanned aerial missions
WO2018049186A1 (en) 2016-09-09 2018-03-15 Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. Geographic area monitoring systems and methods through interchanging tool systems between unmanned vehicles
CN110023863A (en) 2016-09-09 2019-07-16 沃尔玛阿波罗有限责任公司 The geographic area for balancing the electricity usage between unmanned vehicle monitors system and method
GB2568006B (en) 2016-09-09 2019-09-18 Walmart Apollo Llc Systems and methods to interchangeably couple tool systems with unmanned vehicles
GB2568186A (en) * 2016-09-09 2019-05-08 Walmart Apollo Llc Geographic area monitoring systems and methods utilizing computational sharing across multiple unmanned vehicles
US9984672B2 (en) * 2016-09-15 2018-05-29 Gopro, Inc. Noise cancellation for aerial vehicle
WO2018073878A1 (en) * 2016-10-17 2018-04-26 エスゼット ディージェイアイ テクノロジー カンパニー リミテッド Three-dimensional-shape estimation method, three-dimensional-shape estimation system, flying body, program, and recording medium
KR101765235B1 (en) * 2016-11-28 2017-08-04 한국건설기술연구원 FACILITY MAINTENANCE SYSTEM USING INTERNET OF THINGS (IoT) BASED SENSOR AND UNMANNED AIR VEHICLE (UAV), AND METHOD FOR THE SAME
US10472091B2 (en) * 2016-12-02 2019-11-12 Adesa, Inc. Method and apparatus using a drone to input vehicle data
CN106657380B (en) * 2017-01-10 2019-11-26 深圳高科新农技术有限公司 A kind of unmanned plane monitoring and managing method and system based on cloud platform
US9849044B1 (en) 2017-01-30 2017-12-26 SkyRyse, Inc. Vehicle system and method for providing services
US10531994B2 (en) 2017-01-30 2020-01-14 SkyRyse, Inc. Safety system for aerial vehicles and method of operation
WO2018144929A1 (en) 2017-02-02 2018-08-09 Infatics, Inc. (DBA DroneDeploy) System and methods for improved aerial mapping with aerial vehicles
CN108803650A (en) * 2017-04-26 2018-11-13 深圳市道通智能航空技术有限公司 The control method and device of unmanned plane, unmanned plane
US10459450B2 (en) 2017-05-12 2019-10-29 Autonomy Squared Llc Robot delivery system
US20180348760A1 (en) * 2017-05-31 2018-12-06 James Peverill Automatic Change Detection System
US10627232B2 (en) 2017-06-27 2020-04-21 Infatics, Inc. Method and system for aerial image processing
US10242580B2 (en) 2017-07-27 2019-03-26 SkyRyse, Inc. System and method for situational awareness, vehicle control, and/or contingency planning
US11086316B2 (en) * 2017-09-07 2021-08-10 Qualcomm Incorporated Robotic vehicle insecure pay load detection and response
US10948910B2 (en) 2017-09-07 2021-03-16 Qualcomm Incorporated Robotic vehicle separated payload detection and response
US10872304B1 (en) * 2017-09-22 2020-12-22 Amazon Technologies, Inc. Pre-flight fabrication and assembly of aerial vehicles
US10872533B1 (en) 2017-09-29 2020-12-22 DroneUp, LLC Multiplexed communications of telemetry data, video stream data and voice data among piloted aerial drones via a common software application
US10810501B1 (en) 2017-10-20 2020-10-20 Amazon Technologies, Inc. Automated pre-flight and in-flight testing of aerial vehicles by machine learning
US11030906B2 (en) 2017-11-16 2021-06-08 The Boeing Company System for taking into account micro wind conditions in flight plans for aerial vehicles
US10416678B2 (en) 2017-11-16 2019-09-17 The Boeing Company Recharging an aircraft in a region using areas of increased sunlight within the region
CN108045595B (en) * 2017-11-30 2020-08-04 北京润科通用技术有限公司 Method, device and system for testing flight performance parameters of unmanned aerial vehicle
US10346969B1 (en) 2018-01-02 2019-07-09 Amazon Technologies, Inc. Detecting surface flaws using computer vision
TWI744593B (en) * 2018-01-08 2021-11-01 經緯航太科技股份有限公司 Operating system of fixed-wing aeroplane and method thereof
CA3089627A1 (en) * 2018-01-29 2019-08-01 Aerovironment, Inc. Methods and systems for energy-efficient take-offs and landings for vertical take-off and landing (vtol) aerial vehicles
US10769466B2 (en) * 2018-02-20 2020-09-08 International Business Machines Corporation Precision aware drone-based object mapping based on spatial pattern recognition
US11592838B2 (en) * 2018-02-28 2023-02-28 Instrumems Inc. Velocity sensing for aircraft
US11132919B2 (en) 2018-03-30 2021-09-28 Cae Inc. Systems and methods for remotely operated machine training
US11148805B2 (en) * 2018-04-10 2021-10-19 Government Of The United States, As Represented By The Secretary Of The Army Enclosure for an unmanned aerial system
US10273021B1 (en) * 2018-06-22 2019-04-30 Kitty Hawk Corporation Automated self-testing
WO2020004029A1 (en) * 2018-06-26 2020-01-02 ソニー株式会社 Control device, method, and program
US10803657B2 (en) 2018-08-21 2020-10-13 Here Global B.V. Method, apparatus, and computer program product for dynamic flight range visualization
US20220035367A1 (en) * 2018-09-14 2022-02-03 Human Automation Teaming Solutions, Inc. Coordination of remote vehicles using automation level assignments
US11397429B2 (en) * 2018-10-05 2022-07-26 Thomas A. Youmans Apparatus for detecting tilt, lean, movement, rotation, of a user, rider, payload
CN116907496A (en) * 2018-12-14 2023-10-20 广州极飞科技股份有限公司 Method and control device for setting a working route for a working device
US10611497B1 (en) 2019-02-18 2020-04-07 Amazon Technologies, Inc. Determining vehicle integrity using vibrometric signatures
US20220185472A1 (en) * 2019-03-27 2022-06-16 Sony Group Corporation Information processing apparatus and method, and program
US10861164B1 (en) 2019-03-28 2020-12-08 Amazon Technologies, Inc. Visually determining vibrometric behavior of aerial vehicles
US11174045B2 (en) * 2019-05-16 2021-11-16 United Parcel Service Of America, Inc. Autonomous drone diagnosis
US11079303B1 (en) 2019-06-11 2021-08-03 Amazon Technologies, Inc. Evaluating joints using vibrometric signatures
US11703859B2 (en) * 2019-07-05 2023-07-18 Liebherr Mining Equipment Newport News Co. Method for autonomously controlling a vehicle
US11794222B1 (en) 2019-11-27 2023-10-24 Amazon Technologies, Inc. Passive brushes for cleaning surfaces in the presence of acoustic excitation
US11288972B2 (en) * 2019-12-19 2022-03-29 Textron Innovations Inc. Fleet controller
WO2021188274A1 (en) * 2020-03-16 2021-09-23 Asylon, Inc. Automated alert system using unmanned aerial vehicles
CN111553559B (en) * 2020-03-31 2024-02-02 中国人民解放军92942部队 Unmanned ship comprehensive capacity testing method, device and system
CN111846284B (en) * 2020-07-30 2023-01-03 贵州大鸟创新科技有限公司 Unmanned aerial vehicle performance test system and method
CN112327889B (en) * 2020-09-27 2023-08-22 浙江大丰实业股份有限公司 Unmanned aerial vehicle for stage that can independently move and control system
US11119485B1 (en) * 2020-10-07 2021-09-14 Accenture Global Solutions Limited Drone operational advisory engine
CN112672398B (en) * 2020-12-28 2023-06-16 上海微波技术研究所(中国电子科技集团公司第五十研究所) 3D-GPSR routing method based on self-adaptive kalman prediction
US11577848B1 (en) 2021-10-30 2023-02-14 Beta Air, Llc Systems and methods for estimating flight range of an electric aircraft
US11443569B1 (en) * 2021-10-30 2022-09-13 Beta Air, Llc Systems and methods for battery management for a vehicle
CN114167895A (en) * 2021-12-08 2022-03-11 中国南方电网有限责任公司超高压输电公司大理局 Unmanned aerial vehicle endurance control method and device, computer equipment and storage medium

Family Cites Families (47)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US6597818B2 (en) 1997-05-09 2003-07-22 Sarnoff Corporation Method and apparatus for performing geo-spatial registration of imagery
EP0913751B1 (en) * 1997-11-03 2003-09-03 Volkswagen Aktiengesellschaft Autonomous vehicle and guiding method for an autonomous vehicle
WO2002039358A2 (en) 2000-11-06 2002-05-16 Worldinsure Limited Automated insurance policy application
GB2374227A (en) 2001-04-04 2002-10-09 Richard Treharne Surveillance system using database comparison.
US20030218674A1 (en) 2002-05-24 2003-11-27 Sarnoff Corporation Method and apparatus for video georegistration
IL155034A0 (en) 2003-03-23 2004-06-20 M A M D Digital Data Proc Syst Automatic aerial digital photography and digital data processing systems
US20100004802A1 (en) * 2005-01-25 2010-01-07 William Kress Bodin Navigating UAVS with an on-board digital camera
US8692885B2 (en) 2005-02-18 2014-04-08 Sri International Method and apparatus for capture and distribution of broadband data
US8942483B2 (en) 2009-09-14 2015-01-27 Trimble Navigation Limited Image-based georeferencing
US7949181B2 (en) 2007-06-28 2011-05-24 General Electric Company Segmentation of tissue images using color and texture
JP4956375B2 (en) 2007-10-30 2012-06-20 キヤノン株式会社 Image processing apparatus and image processing method
US8497905B2 (en) 2008-04-11 2013-07-30 nearmap australia pty ltd. Systems and methods of capturing large area images in detail including cascaded cameras and/or calibration features
WO2010032058A1 (en) * 2008-09-19 2010-03-25 Mbda Uk Limited Method and apparatus for displaying stereographic images of a region
US8626361B2 (en) 2008-11-25 2014-01-07 Honeywell International Inc. System and methods for unmanned aerial vehicle navigation
US8280633B1 (en) 2009-02-10 2012-10-02 Strategic Design Federation W, Inc. Weather risk estimation system and method
US9084276B2 (en) 2009-09-11 2015-07-14 Aerovironment, Inc. Dynamic transmission control for a wireless network
US8751096B2 (en) * 2010-05-03 2014-06-10 Lockheed Martin Corporation Real-time prognostic and health management system, program product, and associate methods
US9749597B2 (en) 2010-08-10 2017-08-29 International Business Machines Corporation Precise target positioning in geographical imaging
EP2558817B1 (en) 2010-09-30 2019-05-15 Empire Technology Development LLC Automatic flight control for uav based solid modeling
CA2835290C (en) 2011-06-10 2020-09-08 Pictometry International Corp. System and method for forming a video stream containing gis data in real-time
US9086484B2 (en) 2011-06-30 2015-07-21 The Boeing Company Context-based target recognition
EP2562961A1 (en) 2011-08-25 2013-02-27 Telnic Limited Smart card and method of operation thereof
US8600589B2 (en) 2012-04-24 2013-12-03 Exelis, Inc. Point cloud visualization of acceptable helicopter landing zones based on 4D LIDAR
US8965107B1 (en) 2012-05-18 2015-02-24 Google Inc. Feature reduction based on local densities for bundle adjustment of images
US8897543B1 (en) 2012-05-18 2014-11-25 Google Inc. Bundle adjustment based on image capture intervals
US9651950B2 (en) * 2012-07-18 2017-05-16 The Boeing Company Mission re-planning for coordinated multivehicle task allocation
GB2506411B (en) 2012-09-28 2020-03-11 2D3 Ltd Determination of position from images and associated camera positions
US9177384B2 (en) 2013-07-31 2015-11-03 Trimble Navigation Limited Sequential rolling bundle adjustment
US9251419B2 (en) 2013-02-07 2016-02-02 Digitalglobe, Inc. Automated metric information network
US9075415B2 (en) * 2013-03-11 2015-07-07 Airphrame, Inc. Unmanned aerial vehicle and methods for controlling same
US9266611B2 (en) * 2013-06-20 2016-02-23 University Of Florida Research Foundation, Inc. Flight path development for remote sensing vehicles in a moving reference frame
US9437045B2 (en) 2013-07-03 2016-09-06 Fuji Xerox Co., Ltd. Real-time mobile capture and application of photographic images as textures in three-dimensional models
US9460554B2 (en) 2013-09-09 2016-10-04 International Business Machines Corporation Aerial video annotation
AU2014360786B2 (en) * 2013-09-26 2017-03-30 Konica Minolta Laboratory U.S.A., Inc. Method and system of calibrating a multispectral camera on an aerial vehicle
US9964994B2 (en) 2013-10-31 2018-05-08 Ncr Corporation Mobile device conduit for a transaction device
US20150243073A1 (en) 2014-02-27 2015-08-27 Here Global B.V. Systems and Methods for Refining an Aerial Image
NL2012485B1 (en) 2014-03-20 2016-01-18 Lely Patent Nv Method and system for navigating an agricultural vehicle on a land area.
US9688403B2 (en) 2014-05-20 2017-06-27 Infatics, Inc. Method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle
US9641736B2 (en) 2014-06-20 2017-05-02 nearmap australia pty ltd. Wide-area aerial camera systems
WO2016053438A2 (en) * 2014-07-21 2016-04-07 King Abdullah University Of Science And Technology STRUCTURE FROM MOTION (SfM) PROCESSING FOR UNMANNED AERIAL VEHICLE (UAV)
CN107615822B (en) 2015-04-10 2021-05-28 深圳市大疆创新科技有限公司 Method, apparatus and system for providing communication coverage to an unmanned aerial vehicle
US20180356492A1 (en) 2015-06-16 2018-12-13 Michael Hamilton Vision based location estimation system
US9830706B2 (en) 2015-09-17 2017-11-28 Skycatch, Inc. Generating georeference information for aerial images
US9721158B2 (en) 2015-10-19 2017-08-01 Caterpillar Inc. 3D terrain mapping system and method
JP2017129567A (en) 2016-01-20 2017-07-27 キヤノン株式会社 Information processing apparatus, information processing method, and program
GB2552648B (en) 2016-07-22 2020-09-16 Imperial College Sci Tech & Medicine Estimating dimensions for an enclosed space using a multi-directional camera
US10515458B1 (en) 2017-09-06 2019-12-24 The United States Of America, As Represented By The Secretary Of The Navy Image-matching navigation method and apparatus for aerial vehicles

Also Published As

Publication number Publication date
US9688403B2 (en) 2017-06-27
US11059581B2 (en) 2021-07-13
US20170259917A1 (en) 2017-09-14
US10196142B2 (en) 2019-02-05
US11745876B2 (en) 2023-09-05
US20150336671A1 (en) 2015-11-26
US20210339864A1 (en) 2021-11-04
US20190118946A1 (en) 2019-04-25

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US11745876B2 (en) Method for adaptive mission execution on an unmanned aerial vehicle
US10745127B2 (en) Systems and methods for execution of recovery actions on an unmanned aerial vehicle
US11776413B2 (en) Aerial vehicle flight control method and device thereof
CN106054903B (en) A kind of adaptive landing method of multi-rotor unmanned aerial vehicle and system
US11899443B2 (en) Operational parameter based flight restriction
CN107257765B (en) Near-flight test maneuver for autonomous aircraft
US20180096609A1 (en) Fleet management of unmanned aerial vehicles and flight authorization system
US10515416B2 (en) System and methods for hosting missions with unmanned aerial vehicles
EP3735380B1 (en) Adjusting flight parameters of an aerial robotic vehicle based on presence of propeller guard(s)
WO2016172251A1 (en) Systems and methods for execution of recovery actions on an unmanned aerial vehicle
JP2009544528A (en) Autonomous vehicle rapid development test bed system and method
KR20160116531A (en) Drone control system and method for drone control
WO2018110634A1 (en) Flight management system and flight management method of unmanned aerial vehicle
JP2021061005A (en) Processing system, aircraft capable of unmanned flight, and dust state estimation method
KR101981918B1 (en) System, method and apparatus for wide area drone operation
JP6726814B1 (en) Processing system, unmanned aerial vehicle, and flight path determination method
KR20200078073A (en) Method for controlling drone and apparatus therefor
JP6832473B1 (en) Processing systems, unmanned aircraft, and dust condition estimation methods
CN109375649B (en) Method and system for controlling an aircraft
JP2022097504A (en) Processing system, aircraft flying unmanned, and dust state estimation method
CN117321528A (en) Apparatus and method for autonomous management of a drone
Quan et al. Health Evaluation and Failsafe
JP2018069961A (en) Device arrangement device, device arrangement method, and device arrangement program

Legal Events

Date Code Title Description
AS Assignment

Owner name: DRONEDEPLOY, INC., CALIFORNIA

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNOR:INFATICS, INC.;REEL/FRAME:064413/0315

Effective date: 20210111

Owner name: INFATICS, INC., CALIFORNIA

Free format text: ASSIGNMENT OF ASSIGNORS INTEREST;ASSIGNORS:WINN, MICHAEL;MILLIN, JOHNATHAN;PILKINGTON, NICHOLAS;AND OTHERS;SIGNING DATES FROM 20150527 TO 20150722;REEL/FRAME:064413/0309

STPP Information on status: patent application and granting procedure in general

Free format text: DOCKETED NEW CASE - READY FOR EXAMINATION